US20140118870A1 - Connection device with electrostatic discharge protection - Google Patents
Connection device with electrostatic discharge protection Download PDFInfo
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- US20140118870A1 US20140118870A1 US13/913,519 US201313913519A US2014118870A1 US 20140118870 A1 US20140118870 A1 US 20140118870A1 US 201313913519 A US201313913519 A US 201313913519A US 2014118870 A1 US2014118870 A1 US 2014118870A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H02—GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
- H02H—EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS
- H02H9/00—Emergency protective circuit arrangements for limiting excess current or voltage without disconnection
- H02H9/04—Emergency protective circuit arrangements for limiting excess current or voltage without disconnection responsive to excess voltage
- H02H9/045—Emergency protective circuit arrangements for limiting excess current or voltage without disconnection responsive to excess voltage adapted to a particular application and not provided for elsewhere
- H02H9/046—Emergency protective circuit arrangements for limiting excess current or voltage without disconnection responsive to excess voltage adapted to a particular application and not provided for elsewhere responsive to excess voltage appearing at terminals of integrated circuits
Definitions
- the present invention relates to a connection device with electrostatic discharge protection, and more particularly, to a connection device capable of avoiding electrostatic discharge to damage related electric devices.
- a monitor utilizes a transmission interface to connect with a video signal generating device for receiving and displaying video signals.
- the specifications of the transmission interface are broadly divided into an analog type such as a video graphics array (VGA) specification, and a digital type such as a digital video interface (DVI) specification, a high-definition multimedia interface (HDMI) specification, and etc.
- the different interface specifications provide corresponding signal pins (such as a clock signal pin, a data signal pin, a ground signal pin, and etc.) to realize communications and transmissions between the monitor and the video signal generating device.
- the monitor may have a very high voltage (such as 90V) due to the accumulated charges caused by the power-up or other reasons.
- the electrostatic charges of the monitor may be discharged to the video signal generating device via a signal pin, such that the video signal generating device is damaged by a large current caused by the high voltage (e.g. 90V).
- the situation is easier to occur in a factory production line for testing the monitor. Since an operator often requires plugging in the monitor for testing, when the monitor is not connected properly and a ground line is opened, the very expensive test instrument (i.e. the video signal generating device) is easily burned by the large current due to the electrostatic discharge.
- the prior art utilizes an isolation amplifier to sense a voltage drop produced by a external large current flowing through a external resistor and safely outputs a smaller voltage on the other side of the isolation amplifier.
- the prior art can not ensure that the test instrument may not be burned by the smaller voltage. Therefore, the prior art still does not achieve a complete isolation effect to protect against the electrostatic discharge. Thus, there is a need for improvement of the prior art.
- connection device with electrostatic discharge protection capable of achieving a complete isolation effect to improve the disadvantage of the prior art.
- the present invention discloses a connection device with electrostatic discharge protection comprising a first interface having a plurality of signal pins for electrically connecting to a first electronic device, a second interface having a plurality of signal pins for electrically connecting to a second electronic device, a driving circuit coupled to a first signal pin of the plurality of signal pins of the first interface for generating a control signal according to a signal of the first signal pin, and a switch circuit coupled to the first interface, the second interface, and the driving circuit for controlling a conduction situation between the plurality of signal pins of the first interface and the plurality of signal pins of the second interface.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a connection device according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic diagram of a switch circuit according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- FIG. 3A ⁇ 3D illustrate schematic diagrams of driver circuits according to the different embodiments of the present invention.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a connection device 10 according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the connection device 10 includes a first interface 100 , a second interface 102 , a driving circuit 104 and a switch circuit 106 .
- the first interface 100 includes signal pins P_ 11 ⁇ P_ 1 n for electrically connecting to a first electronic device 108 (i.e. a monitor).
- the second interface 102 includes signal pins P_ 21 ⁇ P_ 2 n for electrically connecting to a second electronic device 110 (i.e. a video signal generating device).
- the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 are according to a digital or an analog transmission interface specification, such as a digital visual interface (DVI) specification, a high definition multimedia interface (HDMI) specification, a video graphics array (VGA) specification, or etc.
- the driving circuit 104 is coupled to a signal pin P_ 1 a among the signal pins P_ 11 ⁇ P_ 1 n of the first interface 100 for generating a control signal DRV according to a signal SIG of the signal pin P_ 1 a.
- the switch circuit 106 is coupled to the first interface 100 , the second interface 102 , and the driving circuit 104 for controlling a conduction situation between the signal pins P_ 11 ⁇ P_ 1 n of the first interface 100 and the signal pins P_ 21 ⁇ P_ 2 n of the second interface 102 according to the control signal DRV.
- connection device 10 controls the driving circuit 104 to generate the control signal DRV according to the signal SIG of the signal pin P_ 1 a transmitted from the first electronic device 108 , so as to drive the switch circuit 106 controlling the conduction situation between the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 .
- the signal pins P_ 1 a does not have the signal SIG.
- the switch circuit 106 disconnects the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 for completely isolating the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 , so as to avoid the second electronic device 110 being damaged due to the electrostatic discharge from the first electronic device 108 .
- the first electronic device 108 transmits the signal SIG through the signal pin P_ 1 a.
- the drive circuit 104 is triggered to drive the switching circuit 106 connecting the first interface 100 and second interface 102 .
- the connection device 10 utilizes the signal pin P_ 1 a of the first interface 100 to notify the driver circuit 104 for controlling the conduction situation of the switch circuit 106 via, so as to avoid the two electronic devices at the two interface terminals being damaged due to the electrostatic discharge.
- FIG. 1 is an embodiment of the present invention.
- the selection of the signal pins P_ 1 a is not limited to a specific rule, and any signal pin, which is capable of indicating the connected situation of the first interface 100 to accordingly control the driving circuit 104 to completely disconnect or timely connect the two interfaces, is applied to the present invention.
- the first interface 100 and second interface 102 of the connecting device 10 are according to the DVI specification
- the first electronic device 108 is a monitor having a interface according to the DVI specification
- the second electronic device 110 is a test instrument.
- the signal pin P_ 1 a is a clock signal pin of the DVI specification, that is, the signal SIG is a clock signal.
- the clock signal is not transmitted through the clock signal pin when the first electronic device 108 is not yet connected to the first interface 100 or the first electronic device 108 is not started. Then, when the first electronic device 108 is properly connected to the first interface 100 , the clock signal starts to be transmitted through the clock signal pin. Thereby, the drive circuit 104 may disconnect the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 when the first electronic device 108 is not started or not properly connected.
- the complete isolation effect is achieved to avoid the second electronic device 110 (i.e. the test instrument) being burned due to the instant high voltage electrostatic discharge when the first electronic device 108 (i.e.
- the monitor is not properly connected.
- the high voltage electrostatic charges of the first electronic device 108 can be released via a completely connected ground signal pin.
- the signal pin P_ 1 a i.e. the clock signal pin of the DVI
- the driver circuit 104 accordingly indicates the switch circuit 106 to connect the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 .
- the second electronic device 110 since the high voltage electrostatic charges of the first electronic device 108 are released through the ground signal pin before the conduction, the second electronic device 110 may avoid being damaged due to the electrostatic discharge.
- the signal pin P_ 1 a may also be another pin according to the DVI specification or the synchronous signal pin according to the VGA specification, and is not limited herein.
- a delay mechanism is required to be added in the switch circuit 106 , that is, the switch circuit 106 connects the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 after a predetermined period (such as 1 ms).
- the implementation of the switch circuit 106 is not limited as long as the switch circuit 106 can control the conduction situation between the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 according to the control signal DRV.
- FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic diagram of the switch circuit 106 according to an embodiment of the present invention.
- the switch circuit 106 includes diodes D 1 ⁇ Dn and relays O 1 ⁇ On.
- Each of the relays O 1 ⁇ On is connected between a signal pin (among P_ 11 ⁇ P_ 1 n ) of the first interface 100 and a signal pin (among P_ 21 ⁇ P_ 2 n ) of the second interface 102 , and is composed of a coil (labeled as C 1 ⁇ Cn) and a switch (labeled as S 1 ⁇ Sn) for driving the coil (C 1 ⁇ Cn) to control the conduction of the switch (among S 1 ⁇ Sn) according to the control signal DRV generated by the driving circuit 104 , so as to control the conduction between the signal pins P 11 ⁇ P 1 n of the first interface 100 and the signal pins P 21 ⁇ P 2 n of the second interface 102 .
- the terminals of the diodes D 1 ⁇ Dn are coupled to a system voltage VIN and the control signal DRV generated by the driving circuit 104 , and are also respectively coupled to the terminals of the coils C 1 ⁇ Cn of the relays O 1 ⁇ On in parallel.
- the diodes D 1 ⁇ Dn are mainly utilized to protect other components from damage due to the reverse voltage generated by the coils C 1 ⁇ Cn when the relays O 1 ⁇ On are turning on or turning off.
- the relays O 1 ⁇ On may be selected properly to achieve the delay mechanism described as above, that is, the relays O 1 ⁇ On are conducted after the predetermined time (such as 1 ms).
- the diodes D 1 ⁇ Dn are reserved as the protection elements, and may also be omitted or replaced with other protection elements in some embodiments.
- the realization of the drive circuit 104 is not limited to a particular device or component.
- FIG. 3A ⁇ 3D illustrate schematic diagrams of the driver circuit 104 according to the different embodiments of the present invention.
- FIG. 3A ⁇ 3D are the applications of the dividing voltage circuit and the amplifiers commonly known in industry. The operating method is familiar to those skilled in the art, so will be only briefly described as follows.
- the driving circuit 104 comprises resistors R 1 , R 2 and transistors CON 1 , CON 2 .
- the resistors R 1 , R 2 are connected in series between the signal pin P_ 1 a and a ground terminal GND, and form pull-down dividing voltage resistors to correctly drive the transistor CON 1 .
- the transistors CON 1 , CON 2 form the common-emitter amplifier in a cascaded manner, and generate the control signal DRV (from the collector of the second transistor CON 2 ) according to the dividing voltage of the signal SIG, so as to drive the switching circuit 106 .
- FIG. 3B and 3C utilize transistor architectures and connection methods different from FIG. 3A , and similarly utilize the pull-down dividing voltage resistors R 1 , R 2 to perform division of the voltage of the signal SIG for triggering the transistor CON 1 to be turned on stably.
- the main difference is that a pull-down resistor (a resistor R 3 in FIG. 3B ) or a pull-up resistor (a resistor R 3 in FIG. 3C ) is added between the transistors CON 1 , CON 2 , such that the voltage level may be more stable and the reaction speed is quicker.
- 3A , 3 B and 3 C are each an N-type bipolar junction transistor (BJT), but an N-type BJT and a metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) transistor or both MOS transistors may also be utilized.
- BJT N-type bipolar junction transistor
- MOS metal oxide semiconductor
- the main difference between the embodiment in FIG. 3D and in FIG. 3A ⁇ 3C is that the common-emitter directly coupled amplifier (the transistors CON 1 and CON 2 ) is replaced by an optical amplifier OPC.
- the optical amplifier OPC may generate the control signal DRV to drive the switch circuit 106 according to the signal SIG.
- the prior art utilizes an isolation amplifier to sense a voltage drop produced by a external large current flowing through a external resistor and safely outputs a smaller voltage on the other side of the isolation amplifier.
- the prior art can not ensure that the test instrument may not be burned by the smaller voltage.
- the embodiments of the present invention determine whether the first interface 100 is properly connected with the first electronic device 108 according to the signal SIG of the signal pin P_ 1 a, and connects the first interface 100 and the second interface 102 after the high voltage electrostatic charges of the first electronic device 108 are completely released after a period. As a result, the damage due to the electrostatic discharge of the electronic devices at the both interface terminals may be avoided.
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Abstract
Description
- 1. Field of the Invention
- The present invention relates to a connection device with electrostatic discharge protection, and more particularly, to a connection device capable of avoiding electrostatic discharge to damage related electric devices.
- 2. Description of the Prior Art
- A monitor utilizes a transmission interface to connect with a video signal generating device for receiving and displaying video signals. The specifications of the transmission interface are broadly divided into an analog type such as a video graphics array (VGA) specification, and a digital type such as a digital video interface (DVI) specification, a high-definition multimedia interface (HDMI) specification, and etc. The different interface specifications provide corresponding signal pins (such as a clock signal pin, a data signal pin, a ground signal pin, and etc.) to realize communications and transmissions between the monitor and the video signal generating device.
- However, when the video signal generating device starts to communicate with the monitor, if the monitor, under a special operating environment, cannot properly release charges, the monitor may have a very high voltage (such as 90V) due to the accumulated charges caused by the power-up or other reasons. At this moment, the electrostatic charges of the monitor may be discharged to the video signal generating device via a signal pin, such that the video signal generating device is damaged by a large current caused by the high voltage (e.g. 90V). The situation is easier to occur in a factory production line for testing the monitor. Since an operator often requires plugging in the monitor for testing, when the monitor is not connected properly and a ground line is opened, the very expensive test instrument (i.e. the video signal generating device) is easily burned by the large current due to the electrostatic discharge.
- In order to solve the burned problem of the test instrument due to the electrostatic discharge, the prior art utilizes an isolation amplifier to sense a voltage drop produced by a external large current flowing through a external resistor and safely outputs a smaller voltage on the other side of the isolation amplifier. However, the prior art can not ensure that the test instrument may not be burned by the smaller voltage. Therefore, the prior art still does not achieve a complete isolation effect to protect against the electrostatic discharge. Thus, there is a need for improvement of the prior art.
- It is therefore an objective of the present invention to provide a connection device with electrostatic discharge protection capable of achieving a complete isolation effect to improve the disadvantage of the prior art.
- The present invention discloses a connection device with electrostatic discharge protection comprising a first interface having a plurality of signal pins for electrically connecting to a first electronic device, a second interface having a plurality of signal pins for electrically connecting to a second electronic device, a driving circuit coupled to a first signal pin of the plurality of signal pins of the first interface for generating a control signal according to a signal of the first signal pin, and a switch circuit coupled to the first interface, the second interface, and the driving circuit for controlling a conduction situation between the plurality of signal pins of the first interface and the plurality of signal pins of the second interface.
- These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
-
FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a connection device according to an embodiment of the present invention. -
FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic diagram of a switch circuit according to an embodiment of the present invention. -
FIG. 3A˜3D illustrate schematic diagrams of driver circuits according to the different embodiments of the present invention. - Please refer to
FIG. 1 , which illustrates a schematic diagram of aconnection device 10 according to an embodiment of the present invention. As shown inFIG. 1 , theconnection device 10 includes afirst interface 100, asecond interface 102, adriving circuit 104 and aswitch circuit 106. Thefirst interface 100 includes signal pins P_11˜P_1 n for electrically connecting to a first electronic device 108 (i.e. a monitor). Thesecond interface 102 includes signal pins P_21˜P_2 n for electrically connecting to a second electronic device 110 (i.e. a video signal generating device). Thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 are according to a digital or an analog transmission interface specification, such as a digital visual interface (DVI) specification, a high definition multimedia interface (HDMI) specification, a video graphics array (VGA) specification, or etc. Thedriving circuit 104 is coupled to a signal pin P_1 a among the signal pins P_11˜P_1 n of thefirst interface 100 for generating a control signal DRV according to a signal SIG of the signal pin P_1 a. Theswitch circuit 106 is coupled to thefirst interface 100, thesecond interface 102, and thedriving circuit 104 for controlling a conduction situation between the signal pins P_11˜P_1 n of thefirst interface 100 and the signal pins P_21˜P_2 n of thesecond interface 102 according to the control signal DRV. - In short, the
connection device 10 controls thedriving circuit 104 to generate the control signal DRV according to the signal SIG of the signal pin P_1 a transmitted from the firstelectronic device 108, so as to drive theswitch circuit 106 controlling the conduction situation between thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102. In other words, when the firstelectronic device 108 is not properly connected to thefirst interface 100 or the firstelectronic device 108 is not yet started, the signal pins P_1 a does not have the signal SIG. Then, theswitch circuit 106 disconnects thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 for completely isolating thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102, so as to avoid the secondelectronic device 110 being damaged due to the electrostatic discharge from the firstelectronic device 108. Next, when thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 are properly connected to the firstelectronic device 108 and the firstelectronic device 108 starts to operate, the firstelectronic device 108 transmits the signal SIG through the signal pin P_1 a. Thus, thedrive circuit 104 is triggered to drive theswitching circuit 106 connecting thefirst interface 100 andsecond interface 102. As can be seen, theconnection device 10 utilizes the signal pin P_1 a of thefirst interface 100 to notify thedriver circuit 104 for controlling the conduction situation of theswitch circuit 106 via, so as to avoid the two electronic devices at the two interface terminals being damaged due to the electrostatic discharge. - Note that,
FIG. 1 is an embodiment of the present invention. Those skilled in the art can make modifications or alterations accordingly. For example, the selection of the signal pins P_1 a is not limited to a specific rule, and any signal pin, which is capable of indicating the connected situation of thefirst interface 100 to accordingly control thedriving circuit 104 to completely disconnect or timely connect the two interfaces, is applied to the present invention. For example, in one embodiment, thefirst interface 100 andsecond interface 102 of the connectingdevice 10 are according to the DVI specification, the firstelectronic device 108 is a monitor having a interface according to the DVI specification, and the secondelectronic device 110 is a test instrument. In such a condition, the signal pin P_1 a is a clock signal pin of the DVI specification, that is, the signal SIG is a clock signal. The clock signal is not transmitted through the clock signal pin when the firstelectronic device 108 is not yet connected to thefirst interface 100 or the firstelectronic device 108 is not started. Then, when the firstelectronic device 108 is properly connected to thefirst interface 100, the clock signal starts to be transmitted through the clock signal pin. Thereby, thedrive circuit 104 may disconnect thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 when the firstelectronic device 108 is not started or not properly connected. Thus, the complete isolation effect is achieved to avoid the second electronic device 110 (i.e. the test instrument) being burned due to the instant high voltage electrostatic discharge when the first electronic device 108 (i.e. the monitor) is not properly connected. Conversely, when the firstelectronic device 108 and the secondelectronic device 110 are properly connected to thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102, the high voltage electrostatic charges of the firstelectronic device 108 can be released via a completely connected ground signal pin. Simultaneously, since the firstelectronic device 108 starts to transmit the clock signal, the signal pin P_1 a (i.e. the clock signal pin of the DVI) of thefirst interface 100 has the signal, and thedriver circuit 104 accordingly indicates theswitch circuit 106 to connect thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102. In such a condition, since the high voltage electrostatic charges of the firstelectronic device 108 are released through the ground signal pin before the conduction, the secondelectronic device 110 may avoid being damaged due to the electrostatic discharge. - In addition to utilizing the clock signal pin of the DVI specification as the signal pin P_1 a, in other embodiments, the signal pin P_1 a may also be another pin according to the DVI specification or the synchronous signal pin according to the VGA specification, and is not limited herein.
- Furthermore, in order to ensure that the high voltage electrostatic charges of the first
electronic device 108 may be completely released via the ground signal pin, a delay mechanism is required to be added in theswitch circuit 106, that is, theswitch circuit 106 connects thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 after a predetermined period (such as 1 ms). - Besides, the implementation of the
switch circuit 106 is not limited as long as theswitch circuit 106 can control the conduction situation between thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 according to the control signal DRV. For example, please refer toFIG. 2 , which illustrates a schematic diagram of theswitch circuit 106 according to an embodiment of the present invention. As shown inFIG. 2 , theswitch circuit 106 includes diodes D1˜Dn and relays O1˜On. Each of the relays O1˜On is connected between a signal pin (among P_11˜P_1 n) of thefirst interface 100 and a signal pin (among P_21˜P_2 n) of thesecond interface 102, and is composed of a coil (labeled as C1˜Cn) and a switch (labeled as S1˜Sn) for driving the coil (C1˜Cn) to control the conduction of the switch (among S1˜Sn) according to the control signal DRV generated by thedriving circuit 104, so as to control the conduction between the signal pins P11˜P1 n of thefirst interface 100 and the signal pins P21˜P2 n of thesecond interface 102. The terminals of the diodes D1˜Dn are coupled to a system voltage VIN and the control signal DRV generated by thedriving circuit 104, and are also respectively coupled to the terminals of the coils C1˜Cn of the relays O1˜On in parallel. The diodes D1˜Dn are mainly utilized to protect other components from damage due to the reverse voltage generated by the coils C1˜Cn when the relays O1˜On are turning on or turning off. Furthermore, the relays O1˜On may be selected properly to achieve the delay mechanism described as above, that is, the relays O1˜On are conducted after the predetermined time (such as 1 ms). Note that, the diodes D1˜Dn are reserved as the protection elements, and may also be omitted or replaced with other protection elements in some embodiments. - Moreover, the realization of the
drive circuit 104 is not limited to a particular device or component. For example, please refer toFIG. 3A˜3D , which illustrate schematic diagrams of thedriver circuit 104 according to the different embodiments of the present invention.FIG. 3A˜3D are the applications of the dividing voltage circuit and the amplifiers commonly known in industry. The operating method is familiar to those skilled in the art, so will be only briefly described as follows. As shown inFIG. 3A , the drivingcircuit 104 comprises resistors R1, R2 and transistors CON1, CON2. The resistors R1, R2 are connected in series between the signal pin P_1 a and a ground terminal GND, and form pull-down dividing voltage resistors to correctly drive the transistor CON1. The transistors CON1, CON2 form the common-emitter amplifier in a cascaded manner, and generate the control signal DRV (from the collector of the second transistor CON2) according to the dividing voltage of the signal SIG, so as to drive the switchingcircuit 106. - The embodiments in
FIG. 3B and 3C utilize transistor architectures and connection methods different fromFIG. 3A , and similarly utilize the pull-down dividing voltage resistors R1, R2 to perform division of the voltage of the signal SIG for triggering the transistor CON1 to be turned on stably. The main difference is that a pull-down resistor (a resistor R3 inFIG. 3B ) or a pull-up resistor (a resistor R3 inFIG. 3C ) is added between the transistors CON1, CON2, such that the voltage level may be more stable and the reaction speed is quicker. Noticeably, the transistors CON1, CON2 inFIG. 3A , 3B and 3C are each an N-type bipolar junction transistor (BJT), but an N-type BJT and a metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) transistor or both MOS transistors may also be utilized. Those skilled in the art can make modifications or alterations accordingly and is not limited herein. - The main difference between the embodiment in
FIG. 3D and inFIG. 3A˜3C is that the common-emitter directly coupled amplifier (the transistors CON1 and CON2) is replaced by an optical amplifier OPC. Similarly, the optical amplifier OPC may generate the control signal DRV to drive theswitch circuit 106 according to the signal SIG. - In order to solve the problem of burning the test instrument due to the electrostatic discharge, the prior art utilizes an isolation amplifier to sense a voltage drop produced by a external large current flowing through a external resistor and safely outputs a smaller voltage on the other side of the isolation amplifier. However, the prior art can not ensure that the test instrument may not be burned by the smaller voltage. In comparison, the embodiments of the present invention determine whether the
first interface 100 is properly connected with the firstelectronic device 108 according to the signal SIG of the signal pin P_1 a, and connects thefirst interface 100 and thesecond interface 102 after the high voltage electrostatic charges of the firstelectronic device 108 are completely released after a period. As a result, the damage due to the electrostatic discharge of the electronic devices at the both interface terminals may be avoided. - Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Claims (18)
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CN201210419306.1A CN103794190B (en) | 2012-10-26 | 2012-10-26 | Connection device with electrostatic discharge protection |
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US20160209461A1 (en) * | 2015-01-15 | 2016-07-21 | Amazing Microelectronic Corp. | Test device for eliminating electrostatic charges |
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CN111404562A (en) * | 2019-01-03 | 2020-07-10 | 瑞昱半导体股份有限公司 | Method for electrostatic discharge protection of a receiver, and receiver |
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Also Published As
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TW201417501A (en) | 2014-05-01 |
CN103794190A (en) | 2014-05-14 |
US9407091B2 (en) | 2016-08-02 |
CN103794190B (en) | 2016-08-10 |
TWI502891B (en) | 2015-10-01 |
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